I've usually a numbers guy, but the movement of advanced statistics in basketball seems kind of stupid. I get that it works for baseball and probably most other sports where you have a lot of players and the team is basically the sum of the parts. If you have 8 steroids era Bonds on the team batting you probably will be doing okay even if your defense totally sucks because that's going to produce a ridiculous good offense/WAR/VORP/whatever. But I don't think it works for basketball, and not necessarily just because it's a team sport but that this is a sport where you're not really in a '1on1' so to speak. For baseball when you're batting it's pretty much all you. Your teammates can't channel their inner energy to make it easier for you to hit the ball. This is obviously not true in basketball. Advanced statistics in basketball seem to fall under 2 type of stats:
1. shooting % dominated.
2. +/- dominated.
For the first, you end up with conclusion like Tyson Chandler, who I think is the career leader in TS%, should be taking 100 shots a game and score at least 120 points and easily win. Never mind that he has a high TS% because of his position and that he doesn't shoot much. I think this is closer to a video game where you can just hand the ball to LeBron James on every possession and since he's obviously got the best physical stats out of all basketball players he'll just keep on score at a high %. But that only works for a video game. I remember having a guy take a 3 on every possession in a basketball game on Sega Genesis and since that guy had a shooting rating of 9 that was a pretty good shot and he ended up scoring 150 points or something.
The second kind just measures how much more points the team scores with soandso on. Of course since the best teams in the NBA tends to have the best overall +/-, the inevitable conclusion you get is that everyone on the best team in the NBA tend to be leader in +/- of any kind! If you have even a cursory knowledge of basketball it should be obvious that no one on the San Antonio Spurs is that good in the individual sense but the team plays very well together. Previously garbage players always seem to suddenly become awesome on the Spurs. That should be credited to the coaching/system that allows players to shine, not because guys who are viewed as perenniel losers prior to joining Spurs are really that good and just nobody saw that coming.
I remember they interviewed Poppvich in one game against Heat and where they barely guarded LeBron at the end of 4th quarter and sure enough he passed up an open 3 to another guy which got picked off, and when asked why did he not guard LeBron who is obviously the best player in the NBA, Poppvich said LeBron was 1 assist short of triple double at that time. Yes, a triple double usually correlates strongly with winning because you have to be doing pretty good to pull this kind of numbers. But it's not like the moment you make your last assist you gained a level in your basketball power and get 5 more basketball talent points to pump into TS% or whatever. Sometimes I think LeBron James literally thinks he's doing a basketball simulation game where if he raised all his stats high enough then he will automatically win, and this goes double for most of the advanced statistics guys. Like you'd be hearing them say stuff like "Soandso passed the ball 15 times and statistics show passing the ball 15 times is better!" without realizing whether passing the ball makes sense or not.
1. shooting % dominated.
2. +/- dominated.
For the first, you end up with conclusion like Tyson Chandler, who I think is the career leader in TS%, should be taking 100 shots a game and score at least 120 points and easily win. Never mind that he has a high TS% because of his position and that he doesn't shoot much. I think this is closer to a video game where you can just hand the ball to LeBron James on every possession and since he's obviously got the best physical stats out of all basketball players he'll just keep on score at a high %. But that only works for a video game. I remember having a guy take a 3 on every possession in a basketball game on Sega Genesis and since that guy had a shooting rating of 9 that was a pretty good shot and he ended up scoring 150 points or something.
The second kind just measures how much more points the team scores with soandso on. Of course since the best teams in the NBA tends to have the best overall +/-, the inevitable conclusion you get is that everyone on the best team in the NBA tend to be leader in +/- of any kind! If you have even a cursory knowledge of basketball it should be obvious that no one on the San Antonio Spurs is that good in the individual sense but the team plays very well together. Previously garbage players always seem to suddenly become awesome on the Spurs. That should be credited to the coaching/system that allows players to shine, not because guys who are viewed as perenniel losers prior to joining Spurs are really that good and just nobody saw that coming.
I remember they interviewed Poppvich in one game against Heat and where they barely guarded LeBron at the end of 4th quarter and sure enough he passed up an open 3 to another guy which got picked off, and when asked why did he not guard LeBron who is obviously the best player in the NBA, Poppvich said LeBron was 1 assist short of triple double at that time. Yes, a triple double usually correlates strongly with winning because you have to be doing pretty good to pull this kind of numbers. But it's not like the moment you make your last assist you gained a level in your basketball power and get 5 more basketball talent points to pump into TS% or whatever. Sometimes I think LeBron James literally thinks he's doing a basketball simulation game where if he raised all his stats high enough then he will automatically win, and this goes double for most of the advanced statistics guys. Like you'd be hearing them say stuff like "Soandso passed the ball 15 times and statistics show passing the ball 15 times is better!" without realizing whether passing the ball makes sense or not.